|
|
Family Members join our new Facebook group sponsored by NavyDEP: https://www.facebook.com/groups/Rtcgreatlakes
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
11-24-2014, 10:16 AM | #151 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: seattle
Posts: 35
Rep Power: 9 |
Haasino,
Back to your thoughts on your unicorn AWO reservist. Since we don't do go to SERE etc. are deserve aircrew just limited to being on base? How much time do we actually spend on a plane, if any? |
11-24-2014, 03:13 PM | #152 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
If you're in a reserve VP squadron, you'll have to go through Level C SERE... if you're in a VR squadron on C-130s or C-40s, you'll just do Level A or B online courses. You're still going to fly... you're just not flying over combat zones carrying classified equipment like VP aircraft. VR guys just don't need the advanced level of resistance training MPRA guys do.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
11-25-2014, 10:10 AM | #153 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: seattle
Posts: 35
Rep Power: 9 |
I hate how everytime I want to write reserves my phone changes it to deserve.
Thanks for your thoughts on this thread. Hearing from an actual Aircrewmanis great. Getting a flight suit shortly to take to the pool with me and start swimming my mile in that. I know i know, over preparedness is a fault of mine. |
12-03-2014, 06:12 AM | #154 |
Join Date: Dec 2014
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0 |
Just want to start of by saying thanks for all the info on here, i finally found this site and it provided real info for the aircrewman rating. So my shipdate is 02/05/2015 contracted AW. I've actually grown up and lived 20 mins from NAS Pensacola and been on base a few times taking PST's. I'm really interested in the P-8 Poseidon, If I had my choice of aircraft it it would be the P-8, as a P-3 crewmember what is life like? Do you frequently stay in the US and then go overseas on flights and come back immediately after or do you stay overseas for months at a time at bases? I'm totally clueless about the lifestyle as a crewmember of a non-carrier based aircraft in the Navy. Also, how likely will it be that I will receive training for the P-8? That would fall into the AWO rating which is very common and could I actually go on base at NAS Pensacola and just talk to some instructors there to get info on training and what i should be doing to prepare and also the likelihood of what aircraft I'll be assigned during NACCS. Thanks alot, any and all info is greatly appreciated.
|
12-03-2014, 07:04 PM | #155 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Welcome! Fortunately for you, the P-8A Poseidon is steadily coming into service... VP-5, VP-16, and VP-45 have already fully transitioned... VP-10 is about to transition as soon as they get back from deployment... and VP-8 will complete the Jacksonville transition next summer/fall. Current forecast is to have the MPRA community completely transitioned to the Poseidon by the beginning of the next decade.
The Maritime Patrol and Reconnaissance community is a fantastic community, and the Naval Aircrewman (Operator) rating is one of the best enlisted jobs in any branch of service... it's also the most in-demand specialty within the Aircrew community, with more AW's on the P-8 then there are on the standard P-3's, and growing special programs opportunities for Operators. Generally, you're going to have deployment... which is about 6-7 months... and about a 13-14 month Inter-Deployment Ready Cycle (IDRC). Deployments are usually split between 2-3 sites, with additional detachments of one or two aircraft and Combat Aircrews (CAC's) to areas nearby. To use my squadron's past deployment as an example... they were split roughly 50/50 between airbases in Kadena and Misawa, Japan... and sent individual CAC's on Det to places like Korea, Thailand, Guam, the Philippians, and Australia (The latter two being specifically to search for MH370). Other sites we publicly deploy to include Bahrain, Djibouti, Sigonella, and El Salvador... as well as many unpublished places we deploy to which I won't go into. When you fly missions, you're going to take off from wherever you're deployed or on Det to, and then you're going to return to that location. As far as what I can disclose... missions can be anywhere from 6-12+ hours. The P-8A has in-flight refueling capabilities, and is slated to perform 72+ hour missions in the coming years... we're talking about multiple crews onboard though... Aircrew only works a max of 8 hours before we have to be given crew-rest. While on IDRC, you generally stay at home... either NAS Jacksonville, or NAS Whidbey Island (MCAS Kaneohe Bay in Hawaii is moving the VP squadrons to Whidbey in 2017)... however you may have Dets anywhere in the world... from Las Vegas to Crete... and can last anywhere from 2 days, to two months. Sometimes it's a specific CAC or two who are sent... sometimes it's a mash-up crew with volunteers or aircrew with special skills or access. Also, you may see a lot of vague info... one thing you're going to need to understand as an AWO, is that the MPRA community is much more than just hunting submarines and patrolling the seas... we do a lot of things that don't get published or discussed. You're going to learn what you actually do as you progress through the 2 year training pipeline; it's pretty cool. You're required to have a Secret security clearance to attend A School and SERE... but it will be upgraded to a Top Secret w/SCI eligibility during your time in Fleet Replacement training at VP-30... so don't lie on your paperwork! Your career is going to be severely hampered if you can't get the clearance needed. As far as job selection and getting on base... you'll need to talk to your recruiter about getting on base, but the job selection is as follows: You'll choose/get assigned a series rating (AWO, AWF, AWV, or MH-53E AWS) at the end of NACCS... AWO is always the most common... you'll pick whether you want to be P-3 or P-8, and Acoustic, or Non-Acoustic/EWO at the end of A School... this is based on available orders and you choose in order based on class GPA... and you'll receive your final squadron orders at the end of FRS training at VP-30. If you're P-3, you can give your preference of Washington or Hawaii... P-8 stays in Jacksonville. Beyond that, let me know if there are any other questions I can answer!
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
12-10-2014, 11:31 PM | #156 |
Join Date: Dec 2014
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0 |
[QUOTE=Haasino;34014]Unfortunately, you cannot volunteer for Aircrew as an AE/AT anymore... that ended Oct. 1st 2008 when all Aircrew duties were consolidated into the AW rating. If you want to be Aircrew, you'll need to have your recruiter submit a DAR to switch your rating from AV to either AIRC (Fixed-wing/MH-53E) or AIRR (Rescue Swimmer). Your other option will be to enlist AV, and then try to cross-rate once you hit PO2 (You can try after 2 years, but nobody is coming back here below PO2 currently).
I just DEPd in as an AV today and after reading your posts AW seems like something I really want to do. My recruiter told me I had the option to volunteer for Aircrew duties but clearly he was wrong. How likely are my chances of getting my recruiter to submit a DAR (btw what is a DAR?) and actually being able to switch over to AIRC, AIRR or AW? Also I'm a female and plan on getting my college transcripts in before I graduate bootcamp in June and enlisting as an E-3 if that helps or makes any difference at all. |
12-11-2014, 03:24 AM | #157 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2012
Posts: 139
Rep Power: 204 |
Forgive me for cutting in as this is largely Hassino's thread. As the Navy retires the Aircraft they work on, the AWF and AWV rates are cutting billets to the point that there is consideration of going back to the system where those billets currently filled by Fs and Vs are filled by ATs and AEs who have gone through NACCS. So there is that to consider but if you are more interested in the AWO experience, I'll do my best to answer your questions.
A DAR is a dep action request, they're chits submitted by your recruiter into their chain of command to change the terms of your contact. For you to get an AIRR or AIRC contract via DAR a person with one of those contracts has to drop out of dep. The likelihood is really impossible to tell. |
12-12-2014, 07:02 PM | #158 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
^ BloodyPheonix pretty much covered it.
The discussion of going back to the pre-2008 rating system is mentioned in this article: Advisory Board Formed to Assess Future of AW Rate. It took them 3 years to make the decision to consolidate the ratings last time... so I'm not expecting a quick answer. Maybe by the time the AWF and AWV billets are completely gone, they'll have reached a decision, lol.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
01-07-2015, 02:43 AM | #159 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
Went to MEPS yesterday and got my contract for Aircrew! I ship on the 27th of May!
|
01-07-2015, 03:19 AM | #160 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2012
Posts: 139
Rep Power: 204 |
I just got my hands on the Aeromedical Reference and Waiver Guide and perusing through it I found that fixed wing aircrew doesn't require depth perception. Am I interpreting that correctly? I've seen people who got DQ'd from Aircrew for not having Depth Perception so I'm confused.
|
01-07-2015, 11:36 AM | #161 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Quote:
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
01-07-2015, 06:46 PM | #162 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2012
Posts: 139
Rep Power: 204 |
I double checked the applicant and designated checklists to see if it's required for one but not the other but depth perception is not required across the board for AIRC. The Navy is confusing.
|
01-13-2015, 12:17 AM | #163 |
Join Date: Jan 2015
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0 |
Haasino, big thanks for taking the time to answer questions, I just read this whole thread. I have a wealth of questions and they're mostly AIRR specific. I'm sold on the RS program, I even considered AF Pararescue, but I'm family biased towards the Navy and I want to travel/possibly take classes while active. Here go the Qs:
- What opportunities are there for further training as an AWS/AWR? Like EMT training or anything else within the AW rate, and do those opportunities allow you to advance quicker? - You mentioned the schedule for your rate, is that similar for an AWS/AWR? The 0800 to 01500, flights here and there, etc. how about on deployment? What's their work routine like? - I understand that the large majority of my job will be as a helo crewman, what does that entail? Anti-sub, anti-piracy, transfer of goods, etc. what does that really mean? Day to day, hour to hour, what are me and my helo homies really doing? - How many SAR or CSAR squads are actually in the Navy? Where are they stationed? and, How hard are they to get onto? (I'm actually more and more coming around to the idea of just being an aircrew on a helo, aside from RS qualifications) - Do you know how much of a RSs career really involves the RS side of it? Training, etc (I understand there is very little rescuing to be done, which is a good thing) How do RSs differ from other aircrew, other than the Helo platform? I know it's a lot to ask and that it isn't even your area, but if you can just tell me what you know. I'm an over-thinker just trying to wrap my head around a 6 yr commitment. Really appreciate it brother, you're the man |
01-13-2015, 01:17 PM | #164 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Quote:
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
01-29-2015, 06:47 PM | #165 |
Newbie
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 8
Rep Power: 20 |
Hey Haasino, did you have to go through a polygraph to obtain your TS?
|
01-29-2015, 07:08 PM | #166 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
For my TS? No... but the TS was kinda just a collateral check in the box for other stuff.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
01-30-2015, 03:19 AM | #167 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: NC babbbbbyyyyy ... where we're good for nothing except SWEET TEA, BBQ, and BASKETBALL
Posts: 46
Rep Power: 58 |
Haasino,
As a HMDA, is there any chance I could volunteer for SAR or would I have to drop the "DA" to go Aircrew? And also what do the Aircrew corpsman do in general and on a Day-to-Day?
__________________
That moment when you realize you were meant to do something great. Depped: 20140729 Ship: 20150317 |
02-01-2015, 11:30 AM | #168 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
DA is dental, right? I'm not positive, but I'd assume you'd have to that pipeline for SAR. SAR guys are more combat medicine like FMF. Unfortunately, I really couldn't tell you what the day-to-day is like... I've just never dealt with SAR guys except for the few that were in my SERE class. They hadn't reached their squadron though, so they didn't know either.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
02-01-2015, 11:27 PM | #169 | |
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: NC babbbbbyyyyy ... where we're good for nothing except SWEET TEA, BBQ, and BASKETBALL
Posts: 46
Rep Power: 58 |
Quote:
So I would probably have to drop my dental? And what about AIRR Corpsman? How could I fly aircrew with you guys?
__________________
That moment when you realize you were meant to do something great. Depped: 20140729 Ship: 20150317 |
|
02-01-2015, 11:51 PM | #170 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Quote:
The best information I can give you is to be in good physical shape, and express an interest in going SAR when you get to your "A" School in Texas. From what I gathered at SERE, you volunteer to PT with the program coordinators and other candidates in the mornings before your regular class schedule... if they like you, they'll offer you a spot. They'll also be able to give you better information about whether or not you have to drop your HMDA contract. Unfortunately, that's really all I know because... fortunately... I've never dealt with SAR corpsmen outside of SERE training, lol.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
02-02-2015, 12:41 AM | #171 |
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: NC babbbbbyyyyy ... where we're good for nothing except SWEET TEA, BBQ, and BASKETBALL
Posts: 46
Rep Power: 58 |
Haha no worries this is good info thanks
__________________
That moment when you realize you were meant to do something great. Depped: 20140729 Ship: 20150317 |
02-06-2015, 02:41 AM | #172 |
Join Date: Feb 2015
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0 |
AIRC ATF
Hoping you can help out a very confused and overwhelmed mom......I'm looking for clarification on job info for AIRC-ATF.
|
02-06-2015, 07:54 AM | #173 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Absolutely... what do you want to know?
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
02-25-2015, 01:07 PM | #174 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Secret Secret
Posts: 1,284
Rep Power: 262 |
Hey Hass,
I might be seeing myself in a flight suit soon. Anything I should know about the flight community that most people screw up on their first time flying? Maybe some flight do's and don'ts? /r CTT1 |
02-25-2015, 03:06 PM | #175 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Secret Secret
Posts: 1,284
Rep Power: 262 |
And by soon I mean not, since they just called and said the orders were already taken.
Because **** me, that's why. /r CTT1 |
02-25-2015, 06:44 PM | #176 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Well that's lame... you'd have been working right across the ramp from me.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
02-25-2015, 07:39 PM | #177 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Secret Secret
Posts: 1,284
Rep Power: 262 |
There's still a chance as I might be converting to CTR to go fly, but nothings in writing yet.
The orders I was going for were more of a "right now" kind of thing. /r CTT1 Edit: Do you have any Spook friends across the ramp? |
02-25-2015, 08:06 PM | #178 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
No spooks... but I've got two AWV buddies who are EWOPs... or ESOPs... of whatever the hell they call them these days. That command just had some... issues... at Red Flag, so not going there right now might not be a bad thing.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
02-26-2015, 01:16 PM | #179 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Secret Secret
Posts: 1,284
Rep Power: 262 |
Quote:
/r CTT1 |
|
02-26-2015, 01:58 PM | #180 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
A bunch of VP/VQ guys getting per diem in Vegas for 2 weeks?
What could possibly go wrong?
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
03-01-2015, 08:51 AM | #181 |
Newbie
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 8
Rep Power: 20 |
Hey Haasino, I swore in this past September at the age of 26 and will turn 27 in boot camp this coming May. I was wondering if it is realistic to put on E-6 by the time my first enlistment is done? I'll be 32 and would like to make E-7 some time after I re-enlist. I am roughly 50 credits away from completing a degree in mathematics so I'm not ruling out the possibly of OCS before the age cut-off of 35, however, with all that being up in the air I was just curious if at least making Chief before I am 35 is do-able.
Also, my contract is AIRC but I was curious on the possibility of cross-rating to AIRR before 30. By the time I finish my pipeline I'll be 28-29 so I understand that idea might be a long shot. What about trying to go AIRR when I am up for re-enlistment at the ripe age of 32 (considering the age cut off for AIRR is 30)? Have you seen it done? I would love the opportunity to earn a surface warfare pin and go through the "shellback" experience although I prefer being on a ship as an airmen over a seamen any day haha. I know these maybe questions that are hard to answer because of the transition AIRC is currently going through but any insight would be awesome. Thanks again. |
03-01-2015, 04:37 PM | #182 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Secret Secret
Posts: 1,284
Rep Power: 262 |
Quote:
PO1, let alone Chief, is a HUGE mile stone in a Sailor's career that can take around 6-8 years (PO1) to about a decade (Chief) to make. This isn't the Army or the Air Force. You don't just get to rank up like that in the Navy. You gotta do your time and earn it. That's why becoming a PO1 or a Chief actually means something to us because it takes time, knowledge, and experience to earn that position and title. /r CTT1 |
|
03-01-2015, 04:41 PM | #183 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Jul 2014
Location: Secret Secret
Posts: 1,284
Rep Power: 262 |
For instance, look at AW2 Hassino.
He's a PO2 who's excellent in his job as well as being a proficient expert in general Naval topics. That kind of skill and knowledge just doesn't happen overnight and takes years to develop. He is going to a make a STRONG candidate for AW1, but that just goes to show you what it takes. /r CTT1 |
03-03-2015, 08:52 PM | #184 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Quote:
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
03-03-2015, 09:05 PM | #185 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Joking aside, CTT1 nailed it. As an AW, you're looking at about 2 years of training before you even put on auto-E-4... then possibly another 6-8 months before you can take your first look at the E-5 exam depending on testing dates and when you graduate VP-30. This time last year, AWO2 was only 15%, and AWO1 was 0%... as in nobody who took the 1st Class exam advanced. Last fall it went up to 40.5% for 2nd, and 11.7% for 1st. Only AW in my command to make 1st was a former VQ guy who had 6 Air Medals for getting constantly shot at over Libya and Syria.
To put it in another perspective, there was an A-PACT in my bootcamp division who made 2nd class as an AT before I made 3rd class through auto-advancement. That being said, my flight pay and per diem still gave me more take-home pay than her, lol.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
03-31-2015, 11:51 PM | #186 |
Newbie
Join Date: Mar 2015
Posts: 5
Rep Power: 6 |
Questions
Hi, so I decided I would get a little college in before going into the Navy, and Aircrew sounds perfect for me. Been trying to find out anything and everything about it. My questions would be:
1. Is there a height restriction for Aircrew? I stand at a towering 6'6", and know that I already can't be a pilot, but is there a similar thing for Aircrew? I know the general limit for the Navy is 6'8". 2. I heard that the deployments for Aircrew are not the same as your average sailor. What is so different? 3. Lastly, some people have said that the flight physical has grounded a lot of guys, I'm in pretty good shape but am not sure about the difference between a flight physical and a regular one. What are some of the disqualifying factors, or things that require a waiver? Thanks so much for your time! |
04-01-2015, 04:02 AM | #187 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
Where all does AWS get stationed?
|
04-03-2015, 11:52 AM | #188 |
Newbie
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 10
Rep Power: 7 |
2nd Class Swim Test
During the 2nd class swim test do we use goggles?
|
04-03-2015, 12:58 PM | #189 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 2,858
Rep Power: 343 |
No goggles during the second (or third) class swim. They do tell you to swim with your eyes open.
__________________
Officers: making simple stuff hard since 1775
ACTIVE DUTY SAILORS - Click here to have your account verified |
04-03-2015, 02:57 PM | #190 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Sorry about the delayed response... I've been converting jet fuel into exhaust for Democracy.
Quote:
2.) Deployment will vary depending on if you're fixed-wing Aircrew, or H-60 Aircrew. For -60 guys, the deployment will be with a carrier or small boy and will pretty much be the same since you're essentially riding along with the ship. For fixed-wing AW's, you're going to be land-based and will deploy for 6-7 months to a foreign air base of some sort... Patrol & Reconnaissance squadrons are typically splitting their crews between two sites right now, with numerous single-crew detachments to nearby areas. Basically, we do Air Force deployments while still being able to claim ourselves as Navy. MH-53E AWS' are only in Norfolk... MH-60S AWS' are primarily in Norfolk and San Diego, with one HSC squadron in Japan, and a dedicated SAR squadron in Nevada and Washington. Unless you have an AIRR contract, your only option for AWS will be the -53. Not for the 2nd Class... the only time you can wear goggles is during the 1 mile swim at the end of NACCS.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
04-03-2015, 03:13 PM | #191 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
My eyes are pretty bad so would I just use glasses in the pool? Only other option is contacts with goggles or prescription goggles. Going without anything isn't rrally an option for me since my eye sight is so bad. And, since I'm curious, what aircrew jobs get stationed in San diego?
|
04-03-2015, 04:30 PM | #192 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Quote:
Rescue Swimmers on MH-60R and MH-60S helos are the majority of Aircrew in San Diego... there's also some Reserve AWF's in a C-40 squadron, and some Active Duty AWF's in a C-2 squadron. There are also some AWO's and AWV's working with the SEALS doing... things. Down the road for your shore duty, there's the option of being a SERE Instructor or doing work for JPRA... as well as AWO opportunities piloting LCAC's up near Camp Pendleton.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
04-03-2015, 08:22 PM | #193 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
My eyes are 20/600. I believe disqualifying is 20/800. So no glasses...that's not going to be fun. I can barely see shapes up close lol.
|
04-04-2015, 10:25 AM | #194 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
It'll be a pain... but I wasn't exactly seeing clearly either with chlorinated pool water in my eyes. You really don't need to see to do any of the water survival evolutions though... the tread & float evolutions just require staying above water until you hear the whistle... and the helo dunker is all done by touch since you're upside-down and blindfolded.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
04-04-2015, 04:27 PM | #195 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
Ok thanks a lot! I was really worried that my bad eyes might be a safety hazard. I was getting really nervous but now with what you have told me, I'm feeling better about it. I'm starting to look forward it
|
04-05-2015, 08:19 PM | #196 |
Join Date: Apr 2015
Posts: 1
Rep Power: 0 |
what is parachute ground training at naccas? and what is the intense calthetics like?
|
04-06-2015, 07:26 PM | #197 | |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
Quote:
As for exercises, when I went through I was ultimately up to your instructor... the Navy SAR guys loved to do flutter-kicks and other leg and core workouts... Marine Sgt's and SSgt's loved to run... etc. An average morning session would be something like: - 30 wide-grip pushups - 30 flutter kicks - 50 jumping jacks - 30 regular-grip pushups - 100 situps - 30 scissor kicks - 15 diamond-grip pushups That would be one set... they'd also tell you "on your feet/faces/backs/butts!", and would routinely make you transition between all three rapidly for moving too slow. You'd do maybe 2-3 of those sets... then form up for a run... typically 3-5 miles at an 8min/mi-10min/mi pace. Then, after all that, you'd go to the pool and do the water survival evolutions for the day. Now, that was when I went through... my buddy just took instructor orders there and he says it's much... tamer... now. Instructors have approved PT routines and it generally sounds much easier than it was. I'd actually like to see one of the AW DEPpers here come back with a detailed write-up of recent experiences.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
|
04-07-2015, 06:11 PM | #198 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
So we are going to run everyday at NACCS?
|
04-07-2015, 06:29 PM | #199 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Pacific Northwest
Posts: 1,439
Rep Power: 286 |
I would anticipate it, yeah... plan for 3-5 miles. Biggest non-pool reason for Candidates getting dropped was shinsplints and other running related injuries. If you show up passing the minimum Navy standards, you're probably not going to pass NACCS.
__________________
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here! This is the War Room!" |
04-07-2015, 09:36 PM | #200 |
**Active Duty**
Join Date: Oct 2014
Posts: 38
Rep Power: 9 |
If we are going to be running that much, is there any way to prepare for it in boot camp? I hear we don't run a whole lot and we could lose our endurance that we had before boot camp.
|
|
|